Crusader for equal opportunity for blacks in nursing, Adah Belle Samuel Thoms felt a deep sense
of responsibility to improve relationships between persons of all races. A graduate of Lincoln
School for Nurses in New York, Thoms served 18 years there as assistant superintendent of
nurses. She became acting director at a time when blacks rarely held high-level positions.
Thoms was among the first to recognize public health as a new field of nursing. In 1917, she
added a course on this subject to the school's curriculum. During her seven-year term as
president of the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses, Thoms worked for acceptance
of black nurses as members of the American Red Cross. She also campaigned for equal rights
for black nurses in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. Thoms was an author as well as an educator and
crusader. She wrote Pathfinders: A History of the Progress of Colored Graduate Nurses.
In 1936, Thoms became the first nurse to receive the Mary Mahoney Medal. |